Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1938 — Page 6
I
S. Mr. and Mrs.
PAGE 6
Jack Strickland, 3602
Guilford Ave., and Martha Alig, 5650 N.
Meridian St. stand ready to welcome parents to the open house at School 66 this week as a part of the observance of American Edu-
cation week.
Lilly Chrysanthemum Tea Is Scheduled for Saturday and Sunday
Garden Clubs to Visit Greenhouses Next Week;
Dawes Family
Guests of McGibenys;
Wellesley Group Meets at Luncheon.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON One of the loveliest affairs of the late fall is the annual chrysanthemum tea given by Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Lilly. This year it will be held Saturday afternoon and Sunday at their home in Crows Nest. Friends are invited to view the flowers in full bloom in the Lilly greenhouses.
Assisting Mrs. F. Allison Preston; Mesdames Rhodehamel, Morris Lanville Misses Betty Reed and Sally Reaha
The greenhouses will be open to g and Tuesday and Mrs. Lilly is to en
Mrs. Lilly will be her two sisters, Mrs. Eli Lilly and
Ralph M. Reahard, Harley W.
Brown and Mrs. Hobson Wilson, the rd. arden club visitors next Monday tertain the Indianapolis Garden
Club meeting on Wednesday afternoon of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Dawes of Evanston, Ill, and Mrs. Dawes’ daughter, Miss Marcia Burr, were the week-end guests of Mrs. Dawes’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McGibeny, at their home
in Golden Hill.
The Indiana Wellesley Club is to meet for luncheon today with
Mrs. John T. Clark.
Wooden Shoes Centerpiece for Drama Club Party
Dramatic Club parties have a way of fostering feminine talent for wearing clothes with a flair. Sparkling sequins and rhinestones vied with unadorned simplicity as fashion favorites among those who drifted in from dinner parties to see “Three Men on a Horse” Saturday evening. The show at English’s was a rollicking comedy about the betting system of an ingenuous greeting card writer who fell into the clutches of three sophisticated followers of the track.
The long table reserved for the cast at the after-theater supper dance at the Indianapolis Athletic Club was laid with a red cloth. Four Dutch wooden shoes filled with fat candles, yellow chrysanthemums and red carnations formed the centerpiece. Tall crystal vases of red and pink roses and small bowls of chysanthemums and carnations provided additional decoration. Mrs. William H. Coleman, who was a member of the party which .dined with Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Marmon, wore a white velvet cape over her silver lame gown. Mrs. Henry Bennett, now of Englewood, N. J., who is spending a few weeks at the Marott Hotel, wore a threequarter length black coat over her simple black crepe dinner dress. Deep fringe fell from the neck of Mrs. Fred Hoke’s black crepe gown over which she wore a black velvet wrap. An elbow length white fox cape and cluster of gardenias contrasted smartly with Mrs. Blaine
H. Miller's black crepe dress.
Mrs. David P. Andrews, whose husband was a member of the cast, wore apple green chiffon over yellow taffeta with an orchid in
her hair.
Mrs. Anton Vonnegut’s black velvet evening dress.
Bands of black velvet formed the dropped shoulders of
Mrs. Louis H.
Haerle wore a scarlet velvet cape and flowers in her hair with her {full-skirted ciel blue marquisette gown with scroll-trimmed bolero. Miss Irving Moxley chose pale blue moire with voluminous skirt en-
livened with bands of rose velvet.
The bodice of Mrs. James Minor’s decoilete gown of sapphire crepe was adorned with bands of matching sequins. Miss Josephine
Mayer wore a short mink cape over
her gleaming white satin gown.
Mrs. Julian Bobbs’ dress of watermelon pink crepe was highlighted
with crystal paillettes. Mrs. Conrad
Ruckelshaus was lovely in deep
rose satin with short puffed sleeves and matching bows in her hair. Mrs. Wilson Mothershead, wife of the club president, wore a bluegreen velvet coat over her scarlet velvet gown. Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin chose light blue moire heavily corded at the neck and edge
of the sleeves.
Puppeteers Win First Place at Dayton
The Junior League Puppeteers, who entered the “two-a-day” with their dual performance of “Marco Polo” at the John Herron Art Museum yesterday afternoon, received unwittingly from a juvenile member of their audience the highest accolade. The combination of music, scenery, sound effects, deftly manipulated characters and gripping tale of the young Venetian’s adventures drew one young miss right out of her chair in the third act, and only the intervention of the museum guard prevented her gathering the lovely Golden
. Bells, Marco Polo, et al., right to her bosom.
The local league’s theater committee, directed by Mrs. Rosamond Van Camp Hill, was awarded the blue ribbon in the marionette competition held last week at the Association of Junior Leagues’ first national puppetry conference at Dayton. Included in the cast were Mesdames Irving M. Fauvre, W. Hathaway Simmons, Stanley W. Shipnes, Maxwell Coppock and Mrs. Albert Lang and the Misses
Louise Vonnegut and Betty Brown.
Rose Jochem’s Engagement
To Louis Speth Announced
The ranks of November brides-to-be are increased with announcements of another local engagement and the date for one out-of-town
marriage. Charles Jochem, 1519 S. New Jersey St. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Rose, to Louis Speth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bdward Speth, 2140 8. Delaware St. The wedding will
| pe Thanksgiving Day. 8 » 2
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Prescott left yesterday for ‘Bangor, Me, to attend the wedding of their son, James Henry, and Miss Doris Chal‘mers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Chalmers, Bangor. The couple will be married at 4 o'clock ‘pext Friday at the Chalmers home. : = ” EJ
Miss Margaret Kelly entertained
recently with a miscellaneous show-
er and treasure hunt for Miss
“Dorothy L. Schultz, whose marriage
to Roger L. Snyder will be Thanks-
giving Day at the Second Reformed
~ Church.
- Guests with the bride-to-be insluded Messrs. and Mesdames Fred ‘Scholmer, Cecil Scott, Frank Cooper, George Brewer, Lowell Cooper,
George Gray, Raymond Scott, Na-
thaniel Horwitz; Mrs. Allen Kelly,
‘Mys. Teresa Miller, Messrs. Fred
‘Hazel, Weldon Fouts, Alfred Par;:Misses Sarah Wallace, Dorothy ily, Alleen Feuchter and Jean
Saturday night with a personal shower for Miss Teresa Kistner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Kistner, 263 S. Audubon Road. Miss Kistner’s marriage to Paul McLoughlin, Columbus, O., will be Thanksgiving morning. 2 ”
” A number of parties have been planned for Miss Nelle Birk, whose marriage to E. Vincent Roberts will be Nov. 23. Miss Birk is the daughter of Mrs. Martin J. Birk, 2112 N. Pennsylvania St., and Mr. Roberts is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry V. Roberts, 2342 N. Delaware St. Miss Dorothy Radcliffe will be hostess at a miscellaneous shower Friday, Nov. 18, for the bride-to-be. She will be assisted by Miss Mary Esther Greenen. On Sunday, Nov. 20. Miss Birk’s sister, Mrs. Gilbert Morrison, Pittsburgh, will entertain with an open house and tea at the Birk home. A bridal dinner Tuesday evening, Nov. 22, will be held for the couple and the wedding party at the Athenaeum. Miss Birk’s attendants are Mrs. Morrison, matron of honor; Mrs. Raymond Stevens, another sister, and Mrs. David Hedges, bridesmaids; Diane Elaine Stevens, flower girl; David Hedges, best man; Mau-
fice Poole, Robert Archer, Colum-
O., and! St HH {
Visitors to Shortridge High School will see regular classroom work demonstrated. shown sketching Miss Betty McIntosh, Shortridge P.-T. A. will hold its annual Orchestra will present a concert at 8 o'clock.
2D
» » ”
features of programs planned
Local organizations co-operating in observance of education week include the Federation of Indianapolis School Teachers, the Amercian Legion, the Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teacher Associations and other civic and educational orgailzations. The week, now in its 17th year, is sponsored jointly by the National Education Association, the American Legion and the U. S. Office of Education.
Dr. Rebecca Parrish will give a costume lecture on the Orient before patrons of School 2, at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday.
School 3 will hold open house all day Wednesday. The business meeting will open at 2:30 p. m. with community singing, directed by Mrs. Paul LaWall. At 3:15, a panel discussion will be held on “Patterns for Living in a Modern World.” The participants are W. T. Quillen, a father; Mrs. Mary Sharp, a mother; Rev. L. C. E. Fackler, minister; Edward K. Sims, teacher; Mrs. Helen Forth, social worker, and Harlan Johnson, a student. :
School 7 will hold open house from 6:30 until 9:30 p. m. Friday. The children’s work will be on display in each room and each teacher will give a short talk to parents of her pupils on “Your Child’s School Program.” The auditorium program will open at 7:30 with a group of songs by the Intermediate Choir, directed by Miss Gertrude Free. A moving picture of the school’s May Day exercises, “School 7 on Parade,” will follow. Mrs. Clayton Ridge, member of the School Board, will discuss “Parents and Schools.” A social hour will close the meeting.
Harvey Hartsock will speak on «What the Public Schools Mean to Us” at 3:15 p. m. Wednesday at School 9. Songs by the primary choir and an accordion solo by Gary Baxter will complete the program.
Open house will be held by School 10 at 7:30 p. m. Friday. The teachers will be in their rooms to meet the visitors. D. T. Weir, assistant superintendent of schools, will speak on “Some Standards in Education” at 2 p. m. Wednesday. Music will be furnished by third and fourth grade pupils. Open house will be held from 7 to 9 p. m. Thursday.
Ray D. Everson will use “Education” as his topic at 1:30 m. Wednesday at School 15. Songs by the pupils will complete the program. Open house will be held at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday.
Patrons of School 21 will hear Virgil Stinebaugh, assistant superintendent of schools at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday. Music will be by the boys’ and girls’ choruses, directed by Miss Katherine Leonard. Open house will be held at 7 p. m. Friday.
American Education Week will be observed at School 20 with discussion groups for parents in primary, intermediate and junior high school divisions. The week will be climaxed with open house Friday night.
Walter Gingery, principal of George Washington High School, will address patrons of School 22, at 2 p. m. Wednesday. The Mothers’ Chorus will sing.
Parents of School 28 are urged to visit their children’s rooms Wednesday afternoon to observe their work. Open house will be held from 7 until 9 p. m. Friday.
William A. Evans, director of school publications, will speak on “Paying for Johnny's Lessons,” at School 30, at an open house meeting at 7 p. m. Wednesday. J. D. Adams Quartet will sing.
An Armistice Day program has been planned for School 31 at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday. A resume of extra school activities will be given by the Junior High School pupils. Music will be by the Mothers’ Chorus.
Open house will be held at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 32. The program will include community singing, the Primary Rhythm Band directed by Miss Esther Denny, a clarinet solo .by David Kinnamon, namon, the Mothers’ Chorus directed by Mrs. Rosalee Spong, and orchestra and instrumental music directed by Mrs. Roger Riley.
Parents of School 33 will see regular classroom work demonstrated on the stage at 7:30 p. m. Friday. The school orchestra and band will play directed by Alonzo Eidson. Each department will have a part on the program.
Open house will be held at 7 p.-m. Wednesday at School 34. The Jun{oir ‘High School mixed chorus w.
~ Wh
75, 000 School Patrons Are Expected to Attend Open House Activities
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
EDUCATION WEEK WELCOME READY CLASSROOM DEMONSTRATIONS PREPARED . . .-. .
” t # ~
Open house meetings and conferences of parents with teachers are py Indianapolis Parent-Teacher Associations this week in observance of American Education Week. More than 75,000 patrons are expected to visit the schools.
Prof. George Leonard, director of student welfare at Butler University, will address patrons of School 36 on “Some Vital Trends in Educacation,” at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday. The string quartet of the Marion County Recreational Bureau will play. Russell Shackelford, baritone from the Indianapolis Symphony Choir, will sing.
The Rev. Robert S. Mosby, pastor of the Simpson Church, will speak on “Everyday Living in a Modern World,” at 7 p. m. Friday at School 37. Music will be by the school orchestra and the P.-T. A. chorus. Junior High School Day will be observed Thursday and open house will be held from 7 to 8 p. m.
«Attaining Values and Standards” is the topic to be discussed by Mrs. R. T. McCarthy, Wednesday afternoon at School 41. .The meeting opens at 1:30 o'clock. In observance of Armistice Day, there will be community singing of war songs. Open house will be held from 7 to 9 p. m. Friday.
«Useful Schooling” will be discussed by Albert Stump at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 43. The Choral Club, directed by Miss Ruth Johnson, will sing. All rooms will be open to visitors.
Hanson Anderson of Arsenal Technical High School will speak on “Boys and Girls of Today and Tomorrow” Wednesday afternoon at School 44. The brass choir will furnish music, directed by Frederick Barker. The meeting will open at 2:30 p. m,
Carl Wilde, member of the Board of School Commissioners, will speak on “Some Problems of School Administration,” Thursday evening at School 45. The Intermediate Choir will sing a group of songs. Open house will be held in connection with the regular P.-T. A. meeting. The meeting will open at 6:30 p. m.
“American Education” will be discussed by Dr. James H. Peeling, Butler University, at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 46. Music will be by the school orchestra, singing by Miss Ruth Waganer, and a play, “Little Old Lady,” by the Mothers’ Chorus.
In observance of American Education Week and Armistice Day, a patriotic program has been planned for School 47 at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday. Rooms will be open to visitors after the meeting.
K. V. Ammerman, principal of Broad Ripple High School, will speak on “The Highway of Life” at School 49 Wednesday evening. Vocal and instrumental music will be given by local groups. Open house will be observed.
Misses Ida Helphinstine, principal of Scheol 72, will discuss “The Parent’s Place in the Child’s Education” Wednesday afternoon at School 50. Parents are urged to visit the classrooms before the meeting, which opens at 3 p. m.
DeWitt S. Morgan, superintendent of schools, will address patrons of School 52 at 3:15 p. m. Wednesday. The meeting of the Parent Education Study Group has been postponed to Friday, Nov. 18.
“The New Significance of the School” is the topic to be discussed by Superintendent Morgan at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 54. The invocation will be given by the Rev. Ralph Weber of the Brookside U. B. Church. The Primary Choir, directed by Miss Kathryn Borman, accompanied by Miss Marulla Hoover, and the Speech Choir of 4B pupils, directed by Miss Shirley Guilford, will complete the program.
Dr. E. Burdette Backus, pastor of All Souls Unitarian Church, will speak on “We Believe in the Home and the Parent” at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 8. The Mothers’ Chorus will sing. At 9 a. m. Friday, 15 silk flags, one for each room, will be presented to the school by W. C. Middlesworth, commander - of : Bruce P. Robison Post 133 of the American Legion, and Mrs. Fred M. Wolf, Americanization chairman of the Auxiliary.
Open house will be held at School 60 from 7 to 9 p. m. Friday. The school orchestra will play.
Open house will be held at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at School 61. The children’s work will be on display and the teachers will be ‘in their rooms for conferences. The regular monthly meeting of the P.-T. A. will not be held this month.
Patrons, however, are urged to visit the classes during. American Edu
a former Shortridge student, fall dinner and open house tomorrow night. The High School
A
An art class is
who is acting as a model. The
. WOMEN'S COUNCIL GROUP SPONSORS
The Council of Administrative Women in Educatio journalist, in a lecture this afternoon at Caleb Mills Hall. right) Miss Ida B. Helphinstine,
Helen Loeper, vice president.
"MONDAY, NOV LECTURE . . . .
7, 1938
Times Photos.
will present Dr. Frank Ernest Hill, poet and Assisting with the arrangements are (left to program committee chairman; Miss Belle Ramey, president, and Miss
Symphony Committees Are Named
Plan Luncheon-Lectures To Precede Friday Concerts.
Mrs. Paul E. Fisher will head the ticket committee for the luncheonlectures preceding the Friday afternoon concerts of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. Mfs. Herbert M. Woollen, chairman of the promotion committee for the Indiana State Symphony Society women’s committee, today had named complete arrangements committees,
The luncheons are to be held at 12:30 p. m. at the Athenaeum followed by music talks by prominent musical authorities. The first luncheon will be Nov. 18. Assisting Mrs. Fisher will be Mesdames Hiram McKee, John K. Ruckelshaus, Robert Scott, Urban K. Wilde, Wayne D. Ritter, Charles R. Weiss and Alfred W. Noling.
Arrangements committee members for the auditoriums will be Mrs. Julia Bretzman Shields, chairman, Mrs. Mason Gaston and Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee, -
Hospitality Group Named
Hospitality committee members are Mrs. George H. Denny, chairman, and Mesdames James S. Rogan, Donald Mattison and Henrik Mayer. Menus will be planned by Mrs. August C. Bohlen, assisted by Mrs. Woollen and Mrs. Louis R. Thomas. Mrs. John M. Cunningham heads the hostess committee with Miss Ada Bicking as cochairman. Other members are Mesdames Larz A. Whitcomb, Russell T. Byers, William Young, James S. Noel, Robert B. Rhoads, Luther Dickerson, Michael Fansler, Meredith Nicholson Jr, William Guy Wall, A. Kiefer Mayer, Ralph A. Lemcke, Robert Churchman, William Knight, Henry Adams, Charles O. Roemler and Miss Elsie Sweeney of Columbus. A committee of junior hostesses includes Miss Estelle Rauh Burpee, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Thomas PF. Ruckelshaus and Mrs. John Weldon,
Sunnyside Guild Sets
Luncheon for Today
Sunnyside Guild held a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. today at the Columbia Club. Hostesses were Mesdames L. C. Burnett, Charles Byfield, A. B. Chapman, Albert W. Claffey, Robert J. Clark, Earl Cox, O. A. Chillson, George Dixon and G. W. Dunningon. : A party tomorrow afternoon will be given by the guild at the Marion County Tuberculosis Hospital. Entertainment will be provided by Dennis Dutton’s orchestra. Refreshments for patients are being arranged by Mrs. Herbert Tyson and Mrs, Howard W. Linkert.
Indianapolis Sororities Plan Social and Business Events; Mpyrs. Charles Wells to Speak
Social and business meetings and gatherings of a more cultural nature are being planned by program committees of Indianapolis
sororities. A number of groups at Butler University are planning events—one alumnae group will hold a covereddish supper, another will entertain at a dinner-bridge and several sororities have engaged speakers.
Mrs. Charles Wells will talk on “Who Reads and Why” at a cov-ered-dish supper at 6 p. m. Friday for members of the Indianapolis Alumna Chapter, Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. Mrs. John A. Mueller is chairman of the hostesses for the supper which will be held at the D. A. R. chapter house. Mrs. Mueller will be assisted by Mesdames John L. H. Fuller, F. Elbert Glass, John K. Goodwin, Frieda V. Robinson, Walter Krull, Edgar Young Pattison, Walter J. Hubbard, C. Severin Buschmann and Alfred Hoberg.
Other assistants will be Misses Elizabeth Horner, Mildred Morgan, Margaret Axtell, Rebecca Nicolson, Valentia Meng, Louise Wills and Mary Jane Steeg.
Members of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority entertained yesterday with a reception for friends. Miss Elnora Hartman, chapter president, headed the receiving line, and introduced guests to the house mother, Mrs. Georgia Roach. Other members of the receiving line included Miss Ethel Merrick, alumnae president, and Miss Paula McClurg, pledge president. New Zeta pledges who were formally introduced to the campus included Misses Maribelle Foster, Mary Jane Warren, Frances Durnell, Anna Van Dorn, Ruth Ann Lett, Pearl Richardson and Rose Ellen Gray. : The committee in charge included Miss Faye Mendenhall and Miss Mary Virginia Ernst, refreshments; Miss Hartman and Miss Rosemary Leslie, decorations, and Miss Margery Scarborough, invitations.
A business meeting of Lambda Chapter, Omega Nu Tau Sorority, will be held at 8 o'clock tonight at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Eldred Lee and Mrs. Thomas Cisco entertained the group recently at a monthly social party.
An Autumn Frolic will be sponsored by the City Council of the Pi Omicron, national educational sorority, at 8 p. m. tonight at the W. A. C. Room of the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss Amelia Cook and Mrs. Durward B. Wood are cochairmen
be assisted by Miss Irma Teagarten, refreshments; Miss Clara Kleeman and Miss Maida Johnson, style show; Misses Bertha Staub,
merman, program; Mrs. Truman Wise and Miss Emma Reise, prizes; Miss Pauline Thompson and Miss Elsie Ruark, tallies; Mrs, John B. Gillis, reception, and Mrs. Albert C. Miller, decorations. The party will
be held for members of the six
ES
zenship.
le STORE
Will Not Open Until 10 A. M. Tomorrow
In order to give their employees the right to exercise their powers of citi-
Bo We
in charge of the event. They will]
Lorena Wagoner and Betty Zim- *
Indianapolis chapters of the organization.
The Indianapolis Alumnae of Thi Mu Sorority will be entertained at a 6 o'clock dinner and bridge party tonight at the home of Mrs. W. C. Shannon, 3645 Forest Manor. Mrs. Raymond Toler and Miss Velma Schaaf will assist the hostess. Tickets will be distributed for the annual Indianapolis Panhellenic Association dance Nov. 26 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
Arrangements for a scavenger hunt Nov. 18 will be completed tonight at a meeting of Lambda Chi Delta Sorority at the Hotel Riley. The committee in charge of the hunt will include Miss Mae Thigpen, chairman; Miss Evelyn Clouse and Miss Virginia Paden, tickets, and Miss Alice Jean Willard, arrangements.
Miss Dessie Mathews entertained recently for members of Alpha Chi Chapter, Sigma Alpha Sorority, with a party and dinner at her—home. Guests were Misses Minnie Lee Delp, Catherinee Moore, Dorothy Kohlstaedt, Kathryn Bromley, Lenabelle Hopkins, Bea Currie and Kathryn Gillick.
Ethel L. Denlinger, Lemaux Will Marry
Mr. and Mrs. William Denlinger, Dayton, O., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Ethel Louise Denlinger, to Irving Ward Lemaux Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving W. Lemaux, 4550 Park
Purdue Dean Will Address Zonta Group
Miss Stratton to Discuss Amelia Earhart at Dinner Party.
Miss Dorothy C. Stratton, dean of women at Purdue University, will be guest speaker tomorrow at
a 6:45 o'clock dinner party for members of the local Zonta Club. Dean Stratton’s talk will be on “My Associations With Amelia Earhart.” The meeting, which is to be held at the Columbia Club, will celebrate the 19th anniversary of the Zonta Club’s founding, Nov. 10, 1919. Miss Ann Carpenter, presi dent of the Indianapolis organiza= tion, will preside at the meeting, Miss Lillie Kerz is chairman of the local unit’s program committee. The Zonta anniversary program Thursday will be featured over the NBC “Let’s Talk It Over” at 1:15 p. m. (Indianapolis Time). Mme. Suzanne Silvercruys, well known scupltor, will announce the founding of the Amelia Earhart Memorial Scholarship Loan Fund, a new Zonta Club project. The scholarship fund, in honor of the aviatrix, will be available to graduate women students in engineering with special interest in aeronautics. It was voted at the international convention of the organization last June to give special preference to women students at Purdue University. George Palmer Putnam, Miss Earhart’s husband, will acknowledge formally from Hollywood the scholarship announcement. Miss Earhart was a member of
Ave. The wedding will be in the spring.
the Boston Zonta Club and later joined the New York unit.
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